The Extraordinary Book of Useless Information (2 page)

BOOK: The Extraordinary Book of Useless Information
2.49Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

B
ody
S
hop

OH BABY!

Babies can't taste salt until they are between two and six months old.

Infants have taste buds all over the insides of their mouths, not just on the tongue.

A protein called, appropriately enough, noggin delays the plates in a baby's skull from fusing together until the baby reaches the age of six months.

A baby born in 2011 has a 50 percent chance of living to be one hundred, according to current estimates.

Babies born in the autumn have a better statistical chance of living a long life.

The most popular day for a baby to be born is Tuesday, followed by Monday. Sunday is the slowest day in that regard.

The most babies are born in September, followed by August, June, and July.

An infant loses much more heat through its head than an adult, which accounts for those caps put on babies in hospital maternity wards. An adult loses about 10 percent of body heat through the head.

New studies have found that “third-hand” smoke, found in clothing, is a danger for young children's brain development.

One in ten women report having smoked during pregnancy.

Scientists suspect that about one in eight pregnancies are multiples at the very beginning, but one fetus dies early and is never detected. This is known as a “vanishing twin.”

Fetuses can regrow almost any body part damaged in the womb and children under two have been known to regrow fingertips.

THE EYES OF BABES

At the age of six months, babies stop fixating on other people's eyes and begin watching their mouths to figure out, by lip reading, how to make the sounds of speech. By age one year, most babies have figured this out and go back to paying more attention to the eyes of others.

THAT SUCKS

Newborn boys have been known to die from disseminated herpes simplex virus Type I after undergoing the ultra-Orthodox Jewish circumcision ritual called
metzitzah b'peh
,
where the rabbi (mohel) removes the blood from the penis using his mouth.

LADIES' ROOM

The longer a woman's labor is, the greater the likelihood that she will have a boy.

The more pregnancies that a woman has, the greater the chance that she will develop gum disease.

Cells from a human fetus can migrate into the mother's brain and stay there for years.

A 2012 study found that men whose mothers had high blood pressure during their pregnancy tend to score lower on IQ tests than those whose mothers had normal blood pressure levels.

In the last three decades, the average woman's foot has gone from a size seven and a half to a size eight and a half or nine.

At the turn of the twentieth century, the average woman wore a size four shoe. From the forties to the sixties, five and a half was the average.

Roughly 87 percent of American women have had foot problems from wearing ill-fitting or uncomfortable shoes, such as high heels.

An increasingly popular surgical procedure for women is having their toes shortened, or even having their pinky toes removed, to make wearing stilettos and sandals easier.

In general, women tend to increase their alcohol consumption after getting married. Men tend to drink less.

Men are 1.5 times more likely to get Parkinson's disease than women. Ladies seem to be protected somewhat by the female hormone estrogen.

Men are also three times more likely than women to get hepatocellular carcinoma, the most prevalent type of liver cancer.

WIVES WITH HIVES

Some women are allergic to their partner's semen. These unfortunate ladies suffer from seminal plasma hypersensitivity, which causes hives, tissue inflammation, and in the worst cases, death. Some twenty to forty thousand American women are affected.

Even stranger, some men are allergic to their
own
semen. These men will show allergic symptoms around their eyes and nose and flu-like symptoms shortly after climaxing. Sufferers can be cured through hyposensitization therapy, where they are injected over time with ever-increasing doses of the allergen—namely their own semen.

Some women suffer from autoimmune progesterone dermatitis. They break out in hives after ovulation each month due to a hypersensitivity to progesterone.

Cold urticaria sufferers develop redness, itching, and hives after exposure to cold. Cold air, cold water, and cold drinks can trigger a reaction. Swimming in cold water can cause a full body reaction that may cause lowered blood pressure, fainting, shock, and even death.

In 2001, a nineteen-year-old man died from cardiopulmonary arrest after eating pancakes made from a box of mix that had been opened two years earlier. Apparently the man was highly allergic to a mold that had grown in the mix.

9,400,000 American children suffer from skin allergies, and 3,443,000 suffer from food allergies.

Kids from wealthy families are more likely to suffer from peanut allergies than less affluent children.

PARASITE POWER

Before the twentieth century, autoimmune diseases, such as Crohn's, multiple sclerosis, and type 1 diabetes, were virtually nonexistent. This is because people bathed and washed very infrequently years ago, and all that filth activated an immune response. Today's hygienic practices remove parasites that the immune system was designed to attack, and it attacks itself instead. This is why these diseases are much less prevalent in less-developed countries today.

Scientists are now using therapies where microscopic worms and their eggs are ingested by those suffering from Crohn's, celiac disease, and ulcerative colitis to reset the immune system, preventing it from attacking itself.

THAT MAKES SENSE

The front, back, and sides of the tongue have most of the taste buds. The middle has virtually no taste sensation.

Humans have more pain nerve endings than any other type of nerve ending.

The least sensitive spot on the body is the middle of the back.

According to some researchers, humans recognize seven primary smells—camphoraceous (mothballs), ethereal (dry-cleaning fluid), musky (perfume), pepperminty, pungent (vinegar), putrid (rotten eggs), and roses (floral).

Some blind people can use echolocation, in much the same manner as some animals, to orientate themselves and determine the shapes and sizes of objects by using clicking sounds made with the tongue or tapping a cane on the ground.

One notable practitioner of echolocation was Ben Underwood, who had both his eyes removed at age three, but was able to skateboard, ride a bike, and play basketball.

Scientists have recently found that humans can actually smell fear and disgust in others, and that these emotions are contagious. Researchers collected the sweat of men viewing scary or disgusting movies and had women then smell said perspiration. The ladies sniffing the “scary” sweat opened their eyes wide in a frightened reaction and those getting a whiff of the “disgusting” sweat scrunched up their faces in revulsion.

Women generally are more sensitive to smells than are men.

GOLDILOCKS

The Melanesians, who inhabit the islands north and east of Australia, are the only dark-skinned people to have blond hair.

The single genetic mutation that causes blond hair in European populations occurred about eleven thousand years ago. Before this there were no blond Europeans.

It is estimated that approximately one-third of adult white American and European females dye their hair some shade of blond.

WHAT CAN BROWN DO FOR YOU?

Doctors now can transfer the feces of a healthy person into the colon of a person suffering from colitis. The procedure, known as fecal microbiota transplantation, involves processing the healthy poop into a smooth puree that is infused into the patient via an enema or colonoscopy tube. The healthy fecal microbes displace the bad microbes, alleviating the problem.

WHAT AILS YOU

The average healthy person has about ten thousand different germ species living in and on his or her body.

All the microbes in a human body, taken together, weigh about three pounds.

More than twelve thousand different diseases are known to affect humans.

The plague originated in Mongolia when soil-dwelling bacteria mutated into killing machines.

Plague still kills about three thousand people a year worldwide.

The seasonal flu shot is only 62 percent effective at preventing influenza—not enough to prevent a global outbreak.

Smallpox in the United States was eradicated in 1949, polio in 1979, measles in 2000, and rubella in 2004.

Polio has been eradicated in every country in the world except Afghanistan, Nigeria, and Pakistan, where it is endemic.

2011 saw the most deadly known outbreak of food-borne illness in history. An unusually virulent strain of
E. coli
bacteria found in fenugreek seeds, used to make sprouts, sickened more than four thousand people and killed at least fifty.

Going out in the cold with wet hair or feet does
not
increase one's chances of catching a cold or flu.

The first diagnosed cause of cancer occurred in 1775, when a British doctor noticed a high rate of scrotal cancer in chimney sweeps.

One-half of all men and one-third of all women develop some type of cancer during their lifetime.

A study has found that tanning bed use is responsible for 170,000 skin cancer cases a year. The International Agency for Research on Cancer lists ultraviolet radiation from tanning beds as a Class 1 carcinogen, the same category as tobacco smoke and asbestos.

THE BIG FREEZE

People who suffer from migraine headaches are more likely to get brain freeze.

HO-HUM

Contagious yawning occurs at a faster rate among friends and family than among strangers.

NOW EAR THIS

Scientists can now grow a replacement ear on someone's arm and transplant it to their head.

Australian artist Stelarc has implanted a third ear beneath the skin of his arm. He plans to attach a microphone to the ear once it has fully grown in and wirelessly link the device to the Internet so others can listen in.

CURIOUS CONDITIONS

Epidermolysis bullosa (junctional EB) is a rare disease that causes the skin to blister at the slightest movement. Babies born with the disease lack the protein needed to hold the inner and outer skin layers together, resulting in friction between the layers and blistering. The blisters are usually worst around the eyes and in the mouth. Life expectancy for such children is about one year.

A Memphis, Tennessee, woman suffers from a mystery illness that causes human nails to grow from her hair follicles. She contracted the condition after an allergic reaction to steroids.

A Las Vegas man who suffers from scrotal elephantiasis has a scrotum that weighs one hundred pounds. He carries around a plastic milk crate to support his massive testicles. Doctors have no idea what caused this condition and castration may be the only solution.

Professional commercial voice-over man Tom Rohe lost his voice after having a wisdom tooth removed. Rohe, whose career was ruined, found that his speech returned whenever he took the sleep aid Ambien. He now takes low doses to be able to speak, but his voice is not back to its former professional quality.

A condition known as rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder causes sufferers to act out their dreams while asleep. Kicking, punching, jumping, and screaming are common causes of injury that may result.

Sultan Kösen of Turkey is the tallest man the world. He suffered from acromegaly, a tumor on the pituitary gland that caused him to grow to a height of eight feet, three inches before surgery curtailed his continued growth in 2010.

Adam Rainer is the only documented person who was both a dwarf
and
a giant. Born in Austria-Hungary, Rainer was just four feet tall at age eighteen. Due to what is believed to have been a pituitary tumor, he had shot up to seven feet, eight inches by the time of his death at age fifty-one.

Congenital insensitivity to pain afflicts about one hundred Americans. Sufferers have a normal sense of touch and can feel hot, cold, and tickling, but feel no pain.

Other books

Piezas en fuga by Anne Michaels
Up Close and Personal by Magda Alexander
Stanton Adore by T L Swan
The Kiss by Lucy Courtenay
More Beer by Jakob Arjouni
Manhounds of Antares by Alan Burt Akers
Life After Theft by Pike, Aprilynne
Amanda Scott by Lord Abberley’s Nemesis